The Day of Revolution: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Rape Is Love]] - Subverted. Nakagawa seems to think he can make Megumi his girlfriend through sexual assault. Even his own henchmen think he's nuts.
* [[Rape Is Love]] - Subverted. Nakagawa seems to think he can make Megumi his girlfriend through sexual assault. Even his own henchmen think he's nuts.
* [[Romantic Two-Girl Friendship]] - Parodied. Megumi tries to latch onto Makoto whenever the boys scare her too much; Makoto's interest varies as [[Rule of Funny]] demands.
* [[Romantic Two-Girl Friendship]] - Parodied. Megumi tries to latch onto Makoto whenever the boys scare her too much; Makoto's interest varies as [[Rule of Funny]] demands.
* [[Sitting On the Roof]]
* [[Sitting on the Roof]]
* [[Skinship Grope]] - Megumi complains that she doesn't have breasts; Makoto proves otherwise.
* [[Skinship Grope]] - Megumi complains that she doesn't have breasts; Makoto proves otherwise.
* [[Second Law of Gender Bending]] - Of the "reluctant admission" variety. Megumi concedes "I really am a girl now" near the end of volume one. Volume 2 is more about [[Jumping the Gender Barrier]] than [[Different for Girls]].
* [[Second Law of Gender Bending]] - Of the "reluctant admission" variety. Megumi concedes "I really am a girl now" near the end of volume one. Volume 2 is more about [[Jumping the Gender Barrier]] than [[Different for Girls]].

Revision as of 02:14, 16 April 2014

The Day of Revolution is a two-volume manga series by Mikiyo Tsuda about a fairly normal, if scrawny and undersized, high-school boy name Kei Yoshikawa who discovers after a series of fainting spells that he is intersexed and genetically female. (While this could be any one of several real-world conditions, the exact one afflicting Kei is left unspecified.) Faced with the choice (as he sees it) between remaining an "incomplete man" or becoming a "complete woman" Kei elects (albeit reluctantly) to embrace his newly discovered femininity in the hope that a new start as a girl will heal his strained relationship with his cold and distant father.

So Kei takes a half-year off school for therapy, training and "adjustments" (i.e., surgeries) to feminize his body before returning to repeat freshman year as a girl, hoping that by wearing her hair long and pronouncing her name 'Megumi' (which can be written using the same kanji as 'Kei') she can somehow avoid recognition by her former classmates. Naturally, things aren't going to be that easy.

The manga as a whole is a fairly realistic and non-melodramatic depiction of the difficulties inherent in Kei/Megumi's situation.


The Day of Revolution contains examples of: